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- Hanssen divulged the identities of at
least nine Soviet officials recruited to spy for the United States. In
the 1979-80 period, Hanssen revealed the identity of Dmitri Polyskov, a
Soviet general code-named the TOP HAT who was executed by the U.S.S.R.
in 1988 for espionage. In his initial letter to the KGB in 1985, Hanssen
also exposed the Valery Martynov and Sergei Motorin, were ordered to
return to Moscow and were put to death.
- related the existence of the "spy
tunnel" constructed beneath the Soviet embassy un Washington, D.C., to
eavesdrop on conversations and communications. The tunnel, orchestrated
by the FBI and the NSA, was installed in the 1980s as the Soviets were
completing an expansive new diplomatic compound on a hilltop just north
of Georgetown. Hanssen's tip rendered the several-hundred-million-dollar
tunnel a completely worthless intelligence tool that the Russians in
turn manipulated to feed disinformation to the FBI.
- disclosed the National Intelligence
Program, which detailed everything that the U.S. intelligence community
planned to do for a given year, and how money would be spent. Hanssen
compromised this "Holy of Holies" of the U.S. intelligence community in
September 1987, covering that year in progress, and again in May 1989,
for the upcoming 1990-91 period.
- severely hampered the U.S. intelligence
community's ability to recruit foreign double agents, by revealing both
overall strategies and key operational details, such as the identities
of potential targets. Hanssen divulged a document entitled "The FBI's
Double Agent Program," which included an internal evaluation of double
agent operations worldwide, including joint operations with other U,S.
intelligence agencies, and he later handed over another management
review of U.S. double agent recruitment efforts.
- divulged information about at least five
Soviet defectors, including high-ranking KGB officers Victor Sheymov and
Vitaliy Yurchenko, Hanssen passed along debriefing reports on Sheymov
and disclosed the defector's whereabouts in the United States, making
him susceptible to reprisal from the KGB.
- revealed the ongoing FBI espionage
investigation of Felix Block, a State Department officer who was
believed to be spying for the Soviet Union. Hanssen's revelation allowed
the KGB to alert Block to the investigation, foiling the Bureau's
attempts to arrest him.
Between 1985 and 2001, Robert Hanssen also:
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